"It's not a question of finding Gaddafi, it's ensuring the regime does not have the capability to continue waging war against its own people," he told the BBC.

"The attack that we launched on the bunker in Sirte last night was to make sure that there was no alternative command and control should the regime try to leave Tripoli."

The Storm Shadow missile is a long-range weapon optimised for use against hardened targets such as bunkers and command and control centres.

Rebel military spokesman Ahmed Bani Said he hoped the Sirte attacks would give heart to local opponents of Gaddafi.

"Maybe this will help them. Maybe this will make the force there leave. Maybe the mercenaries will run away," Bani said.

The rebels say Gaddafi forces include many mercenaries from Chad and other African countries.

"After this bombing, maybe the people there will try to rise up," Bani said.

The rebels are approaching Sirte from both the east and west, hoping to force Gaddafi's fighters to flee to the south for a final showdown, perhaps in the desert town of Sabha, another bastion of Gaddafi support where many members of his tribe live.

But the rebels also hope Gaddafi's loyalists in the town will give up without a fight and they have been trying to negotiate a solution.

The MoD said the Tornados earlier destroyed one of Gaddafi's few remaining long-range surface to air missile systems, near Al Watiyah, close to the Tunisian border.

British jets also destroyed a command and control node that remained in former regime hands on the road south from Tripoli to the International Airport, it added.

You have no doubt been hearing a lot about the Paris Agreement and know that it pertains to climate change, but are too embarrassed at this stage to ask for an overall explanation of what it's all about.